- Sofia Petrovna
infobox Book |
name = Sofia Petrovna
title_orig =
translator = Aline Worth (1988), Olga Kagan & Mara Kashper (2002)
author =Lydia Chukovskaya
cover_artist =
country = U.S.S.R.
language = Russian
series =
genre = Literary fiction
publisher =Northwestern University Press ,Focus Publishing /R. Pullins Company
release_date = 1965 (Russian), 1967 (English)
media_type = Print (Hardback &Paperback )
pages = 120 pp (1988 edition), 161 pp (2002 edition)
isbn = ISBN 0-8101-0794-5 (1988 paperback edition)
preceded_by =
followed_by ="
Sofia Petrovna " is anovella byRussia n authorLydia Chukovskaya , written in the late 1930s in theSoviet Union . It is notable as one of the few surviving accounts of theGreat Purge actually written during the purge era.ynopsis
Sofia Petrovna, a typist in the
Soviet Union in1937 proud of the achievements of her son Nikolai (Kolya). Kolya, an engineering student and strongCommunist , is at the beginning of a promising career, with his picture featured on the cover of "Pravda ". Before long, however, theGreat Purge begins and Sofia's coworkers begin vanishing, amid accusations of treachery. Soon, Kolya's best friend Alik reports that Kolya has been arrested. Sofia and her friend and fellow typist Natasha try to find out more but are drowned in a sea of bureaucrats and long lines. More people vanish, and Sofia spends ever more time in lines at government buildings. Natasha makes a typographical error that is mistaken for a criticism of theRed Army and she is fired. When Sofia defends her, she is criticized and soon forced out as well. Alik is questioned, and when he does not renounce Kolya, he, too, is arrested and vanishes. Natasha and Sofia both lose their will to live. Natasha commits suicide via poison, and Sofia immerses herself in a fantasy of Kolya's return. When she finally gets a letter from Kolya, in which he reaffirms his innocence and tells more of his own story, Sofia tries to fight for his freedom again, but realizes that, in this bizarre, chaotic place, she will likely only place more suspicion on herself and Kolya. Out of desperation, she burns the letter.History
Based on her experiences during the
Great Purge of 1938-39, it was written in 1939-40 but remained unpublished due to the critical and honest nature of the piece. Originally written in a school exercise book, it was hidden, as its discovery could have endangered Chukovskaya. With the death ofJoseph Stalin in1953 , and his subsequent denunciation byKhrushchev , Chukovskaya reexamined the work, edited out a no-longer-relevant introduction, and sought publication in1962 . The book was nearly published in1963 , but was pulled before it could be released due to a changing political climate. It finally saw release inFrance in1965 in Russian but with a changed title ("The Deserted House") and different character names. It was then published in theUnited States , in Russian, with the correct title, in "Novy Zhurnal". [Chukovskaya, Lydia. "Sofia Petrovna".Evanston ,IL :Northwestern University Press ,1988 . Information found in the Author's Note/foreword, and afterword.] However, the book was not published in Chukovskaya's native country, and she forbade publication of any other work until after the release inRussia of "Sofia Petrovna". The book was not published in theSoviet Union until1988 amidstGlasnost . [http://www.chukfamily.ru/Lidia/Biblio/dubinskaia.htm Website of the Chukovskaya family]Notes
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